This is a school bus for Yeshiva Chasan Sofer School on 51st Street near 19th Avenue in Borough Park, Brooklyn. It has an ad in Yiddish on the side. The bus is run by YCS Transportation and was parked on 19th Avenue.
ALBANY — Taxpayers would be forced to pay for busing kids from yeshivas that have after-hours academic programs under a plan quietly floated by Senate Republicans.
The state and city already split the cost of busing kids to private schools during the regular school day.
But over the objections of Mayor Bloomberg, the Senate GOP wants to go further by requiring bus service for schools that offer classes until at least 5 p.m.
According to Bloomberg aides, 25 yeshivas and three charter schools would qualify at a cost of $3 million to the city and state under the GOP plan.
Costs are expected to soar in future years as more yeshivas and private schools stay open longer to take advantage of the change.
“In a difficult time of budget cuts, when the city is struggling to protect core services, it defies imagination that the Legislature would create expensive new mandates to benefit specific groups,” said Bloomberg spokesman Mark Botnick.
The little-noticed proposal in the Senate’s recent budget plan is said to be gaining traction in negotiations among state leaders.
Critics call it an election-year gift to the influential Brooklyn Jewish community at a time when the GOP is battling to claim a seat that used to belong to convicted ex-Sen. Carl Kruger — a charge Senate officials deny.
Republicans say Brooklyn Jewish leaders requested the change after an Orthodox boy, Leiby Kletzky, was murdered last year walking home from camp.
“All city students deserve a safe passage home from school,” said a GOP spokeswoman.
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